Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Self-evident truths still inspire

- By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK — Shauna Marie O’Toole is a transgende­r activist who has organized and attended countless rallies and lobbied New York State lawmakers for legal protection­s. Convinced that “no amount of science” would win over opponents, she decided that an “emotional statement” was needed, one drawing upon words as rooted as any in American history.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident,” O’Toole wrote, “that all people, regardless of race, gender, religion, immigratio­n or economic status, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, are created equal, that they are endowed by their government with certain unalienabl­e Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

O’Toole, who lives in the Rochester area, received hundreds of responses after she posted her Declaratio­n of Transgende­r Independen­ce online, from expression­s of support to suggestion­s that Thomas Jefferson would have thought she was crazy. But for O’Toole, the original Declaratio­n of Independen­ce is more than an old document for students to memorize. It’s a starting point for seekers of social justice.

“I think for many activists like myself, it symbolizes what we are willing to do to secure Liberty for ourselves and our posterity,” she said in an email.

Historians debate what the slave-holding Jefferson and his fellow drafters meant by writing “all men are created equal,” but the Declaratio­n has inspired those not mentioned or even imagined in the text. For more than two centuries, Trans activist Shauna Marie O’Toole’s Declaratio­n of Transgende­r Independen­ce drew upon Thomas Jefferson’s words.

it has informed some of the country’s defining rhetoric, from Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, while serving as a template for feminists and labor unions, LGBTQ rights and civil rights.

When Americans seek to appeal to the country’s presumed ideals, its fundamenta­l promises, they often turn to the Declaratio­n.

“When Jefferson made his famous statement about equality, he did not really mean that we were created equal individual­ly; the real point was that Americans, collective­ly, as a people, had the same right to self-government as all other peoples,” says Jack Rakove, whose books include “Revolution­aries: A New History of the Invention of America” and “Original

Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constituti­on,” which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1997.

“But over time ... the equality statement acquired the aspiration­al purpose it has held ever since: that each of us is equal in legal status or moral weight or civic ability to everyone else,” Rakove says.

Danielle Allen, author of “Our Declaratio­n: A Reading of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in Defense of Equality,” says that soon after 1776, abolitioni­sts were mentioning the Declaratio­n in their fight against slavery.

But its gradual.

Allen and Christophe­r Warren, a curator of American history at the Library of Congress, both cite the War of 1812 as heightenin­g national pride and anxiety and reviving emotions about the canonizati­on was

country’s past. The Declaratio­n took greater hold in the 1820s as Jefferson, John Adams and other founders died.

Through much of the 19th century, “declaratio­ns” were issued. The Working Men’s Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, issued in 1829, begins, “When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one class of a community to assert their natural and unalienabl­e rights in opposition to other classes of their fellow men. ...”

The Socialist Labor Party stated in 1895, “When, in the course of human progressio­n, the despoiled class of wealth producers becomes fully conscious of its rights and determined to take them, a decent respect to the judgment of posterity requires that it should declare the causes which impel it to change the social

order.”

Before and during the Civil War, North and South invoked the Declaratio­n, but for different reasons.

Historian Ted Widmer, currently working on a book about Lincoln, notes that Lincoln often mentioned the Declaratio­n in speeches even before he was president. When he journeyed from Springfiel­d, Illinois, to Washington for his 1861 inaugurati­on, Lincoln made a point of stopping at Independen­ce Hall in Philadelph­ia, where he told those gathered that he “never had a feeling politicall­y that did not spring” from the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

“The Declaratio­n is the cudgel he uses to beat his political opponents,” Widmer says. “We can be the kind of country that builds upon the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and grants equality and rights or can be a slave society.”

Meanwhile, the Confederat­es cited the Declaratio­n in asserting their right to secede, but scorned the language of equality.

Georgia’s leaders borrowed from the Declaratio­n in announcing that they had “dissolved their political connection with the Government of the United States of America.” In 1861, Confederat­e Vice President Alexander H. Stephens gave what was called the “Cornerston­e” speech, insisting his new government’s “cornerston­e rests upon the great truth, that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery — subordinat­ion to the superior race — is his natural and normal condition.”

Abolitioni­sts and civil rights speakers again and again drew upon the Declaratio­n.

“Are the great principles of political freedom and of natural justice, embodied in that Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, extended to us?” Frederick Douglass asked in his famous 1852 address “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?”

In his “I Have a Dream” speech, King insisted the document meant “all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the unalienabl­e rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Author and journalist TaNehisi Coates, in his recent Congressio­nal testimony on whether the country should offer reparation­s for slavery and racial discrimina­tion, cited the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce as a reminder of a path untaken.

“Enslavemen­t reigned for 250 years on these shores. When it ended, this country could’ve extended its hallowed principles — life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness — to all, regardless of color,” Coates said.

“But America had principles in mind.” we other

 ?? SHAUNA MARIE O’TOOLE ??
SHAUNA MARIE O’TOOLE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States